The plajntiffs. are partners, engaged in keeping a livery stable in the city of Springfield in this state. The defendant is a corporation engaged, as the assignee of a franchise .granted by the city of Springfield to one Perkins, in supplying the inhabitants of that city with water. This is a su-i-t-iu eq-aityior an injunction — t-O' restrain the defendants from cutting off the supply of water from, the , Every etablerofThe plaintiffs. The court granted a provisional injunction, but dissolved it on final hearing, and the plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.
The franchise, .was granted To Perkins by the city in the.ffo-HnU¿í-.-an~ ordinance, the provisions of which were accepted by him. This ordinance, among other
The ordinance_ also confers upon Perkins, or his assigns, the power"to collect, .as their annual rate for the use of water, a tariff of prices equal to, but not exceeding, the annexed list as follows: * * * “ Livery-horses,^including all of a similar kind, and washing ■carriages, $3; each additional stall, $1.50.” In pursuance of the power thus granted, the defendant corporation established.' a series..of...regulations prohibiting . among other.things the waste of water, and providing that aTviolation of the same would be visited with a loss of dhe water supply, etc. In one of these regulations the company reserved the power to ascertain by meters the quantity of water used in any case, and provided that a meter should be affixed, whenever, in the judgment of the company, it should be deemed • expedient.
The defendants, having satisfied themselves that the .plaintiffs were wasting the water supplied to them at their livery stable, affixed a water meter to the pipe which supplied the stable, and made out bills against the jplaintiffs for the water supplied to their stable, as shown by the meter measurement, in excess of the .amount of twenty gallons per horse per day, which amount included also what was deemed necessary for the plaintiffs to expend in the washing- of.-their carriages and buggies. By these bills the defendants • demand of the plaintiffs about $35 or $30 a month, .roughly speaking, in excess of what the plaintiffs would
The plaintiffs, on the other hand, deny the right of the defendants to subject their livery stable to a meter measurement of the water used, and deny their right to place any limit whatever upon the amount of water which they may use; but take the position that, if they are guilty of wasting water supplied to them by defendants, the remedy of the defendants must be in a common-law action for damages for such waste, and that the defendants cannot take the remedy into their own hands by shutting off the water, or by charging the plaintiffs for such amount as the defendants may deem to be waste, under the pain of shutting off their supply of water if the plaintiffs do not pay such extra charge.
The defendants gave no evidence whatever, attempting to justify the limit which they fix at twenty gallons per day per horse, including the washing of vehicles. But the senior partner of the plaintiffs, testifying as a witness in behalf of the plaintiffs, gave evidence which helped the defendants out in this particular, which was to the effect that the average amount of water which a horse will drink in summer is about sixteen gallons, and
One witness, a livery-stable keeper in Springfield, who had in his stable about thirty horses, testified on behalf of the defendant that, since they had put in a meter to measure the water supplied to his stable, and had thereby increased his bills, he had been in the habit of washing his buggies by revolving the wheels in a trough of water, by which means he had considerably reduced his bills. His testimony tends to show that, this mode of washing buggies is much more economical in regard to the use of water, and is entirely practicable. On the other hand several livery-stable keepers, testifying on behalf of the plaintiffs, expressed the opinion that such a mode of washing would not be practicable, basing their opinion on the ground that the water in the trough would become full of sand and gravel, which would be picked up by the sponge and would scratch the paint of the buggy.
In the state of the pleadings and the evidence we are, on the whole, justified in assuming that there has been on the part of the plaintiffs a-gross waste oTthe water supplied to them by the defendant which the-plaintiffs have wdiolly failed to justify or even to-account for. This certainly justifies the defendant in taking measures to prevent the waste. The most-reasonable measure which they could take seems to have been to put a water meter in the pipe supplying the plaintiffs’ stable, whereby to measure the amount of water consumed by them, and to charge them for so much of their consumption as should be unreasonable
We do not take the view, pressed upon us by counsel for the plaintiffs, that, if the plaintiffs do not see fit to pay this excessive charge, the only remedy of the defendants is an action at law to recover the same. The slightest reflection will show that a water company could not do business, if its only remedy for the waste of its water by its consumers consisted in actions at law against them severally. This would lead to an almost infinity of actions to collect very small bills against scattered consumers, many of them mere renters and insolvent. The ordinance under which the defendants are supplying water to the inhabitants of Springfield proceeds upon this ground, in so far as it gives ' them, in language already quoted, the right to shut off the sxxpply of such consumers in case of waste.
Our judgment upoxx the evidence, then, is that the defendants were justified in pxxtting in the meter and in taking means to measure the waste of water which was being made by the plaintiffs, and in charging and collecting at the maxixnum rate allowed by the ordinance, for such waste. But we also think that, in estimating the amount which they might reasonably consume at the rate of $2 per horse, fixed by the ordinance, the water company made their estimate unreasonably low. We are of opixxion that, taking all seasons of the year together, the plaintiffs ought, on the basis of their own evidence, allowing for a reasonable and unavoidable amouxxt of waste, to be allowed the amount of twenty-five gallons per day per horse.
If the plaintiffs had tendered to the defendants what the plaintiffs’ own evidence shows was due to them, and the defendants had refused to receive it, the court, upon such showing, woxxld have been bound to restrain the defendants from shutting off the water for non-payment of their bills. Bxxt the plaintiffs failed
In passing on the plaintiffs’ evidence we do not wish to intimate that they are concluded, in another proceeding, by the figures testified to by their senior partner. They must, however, determine what is justly due the defendants, and make an approximate tender before they can successfully invoke equitable protection.
The'judgment is affirmed.